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Bonds to continue declining until morale improves - Bloomberg

Robert Burgess wrote his opinions on the state of bond markets for Bloomberg, where he highlights the weakness in bonds and how the selloff is leading market perspective.

Key quotes

"No one should be surprised by the recent sell-off in the bond market, as it's been anticipated for years. What has been unexpected is the speed of the move. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note reached 3.12 percent Thursday, the highest since 2011. At the start of this year, economists and strategists didn't foresee yields reaching such levels until mid-2019, Bloomberg News surveys show. 

To value investors, such a move smacks of a market that has overshot to the downside. Indeed, there are any number of reasons to like bonds, including 10-year yields that are a hefty 1 percentage point above the inflation rate and a global economy that appears to be downshifting. But like so much else in global markets today, fundamentals hardly matter. It's all about "momentum," and right now betting against bonds is a winning trade. Commodities Futures Trading Commission data show that hedge funds and other large speculators have built up a record position against 10-year Treasuries, and derivatives suggest that the odds of four interest-rate increases by the Federal Reserve this year are getting close to 50 percent.

If the bond market does reverse and begin to rally again, perhaps it will be because of overextended U.S. consumers. The New York Fed released data on Thursday that showed total household debt jumped 0.5 percent in the first quarter to $13.2 trillion, a new record. At the same time, the number of consumers inquiring about taking on more credit within six months fell 5.65 percent, the most since the height of the financial crisis at the start of 2009. The optimists might say that the decline is a good sign because it shows consumers see less of a need to take on debt thanks to the savings realized from tax reform. The pessimists might say it shows a lack of confidence in the outlook for the economy despite any extra savings from tax reform.

Author

Joshua Gibson

Joshua joins the FXStreet team as an Economics and Finance double major from Vancouver Island University with twelve years' experience as an independent trader focusing on technical analysis.

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